
If you live in a rural area and get your drinking water from wells or rivers, you need to use water testing kits for bacteria on a regular basis.
The Center for Disease Control has estimated that more than 40% of wells are contaminated with fecal matter in the form of coliform bacteria, as well as nitrates from fertilizer and animal waste runoff. E. coli bacteria sicken and kill thousands of people each year because of contaminated water supplies. Rural areas are especially hard hit as they often have no other source of water other than wells. Regular government testing of the groundwater supply that feeds your well is haphazard at best, if done at all. The sad truth is there are not enough voters left in the countryside to make much of a difference to your elected officials. You need to take control of your own water testing for the sake of your family and yourself.
There are several water testing kits for bacteria on the market. The only real difference between them is the option to do additional testing for nitrates and other chemicals that may be contaminating your water supply. If you suspect that other pollutants may be impacting the quality of your well water, you should definitely go for the more comprehensive tests. Otherwise, the simplest water testing kit to test for bacteria is TestCountry’s Bacteria in Water Testing Kit.
This is a simple petri dish kit. You put a sample of the water on the dish, let it incubate for 48 hours and then count the colonies of bacteria that have grown. (Reminds be a biology class in highschool!) The instructions look intimidating, but just follow them step by step for accurate results.
There are two other water testing kits that test for bacteria as well as other contaminants.

The Watersafe Instant Water Testing Kit information says, “Even clear good tasting water may contain bacteria, lead nitrates, nitrites, iron, Pesticides, Chlorine, arsenic Atrizine, Simazine, Cyanazine, Propazine, Simetryn, Prometryn, Desethyl Atrazine, Atraton, Desisopropyl Atrazine, Tertbuthylazine, Ametryn, 2-Hydroxy Atrazine and numerous other chemicals known to be dangerous to your health and wellness. Many go undetected until it is too late.”
Unfortunately, I can’t tell if this test actually tests for all those chemicals. I also wasn’t able to find test procedures so this is not my recommended water testing kit.
The price is slightly more than the first test, but if you’re like me, I prefer to have a lot of information before I make any purchase over the net, so I wouldn’t buy this one.
The third and most expensive water testing kit does a lot more than just bacterial testing. But you’re also paying almost four times the cost. But here’s what the test includes:
“1 bacteria water test, 1 lead water test, 1 pesticide water test, 2 iron water test, 2 hardness water test, 2 pH water test, 2 alkalinity water test, 2 copper water test, 2 chlorine water test, 2 nitrate water test, 2 nitrite water test, 1 water test results sheet, 1 basic water knowledge information book”
If you’re living near a feedlot operation, a pig farm, or even just a large agricultural operation that isn’t “organic”, this is probably the test for you. I’m tempted to call it the “rural water test kit” with the tests for pesticides, nitrates and nitrites. The only drawback I see is that there is only one bacterial water test. Still, you can always pick up one of the cheaper bacterial tests if you need to.
I hope that has helped. If you want to order any of these tests, please click on the TestCountry link in the “BlogRoll” box to the right.
Photo: http://www.flickr.com/photos/pinksherbet/503685059/
Technorati Tags: bacterial contamination, bio waste, e coli, pollution, water quality, water testing kits